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The Cost of Living, Farmers and Potholes

higher prices

Table of Contents

Christopher Luxon
National Party Leader

In my visits to support services, the high levels of need in many communities are obvious. Fortunately, foodbanks – like South Kaipara Good Food which I visited last week – exist to meet demand, but many report they are struggling to keep up. High housing costs are eating up household budgets and there’s no sign of relief while Labour is in government. On Thursday, data was released showing that food prices have increased by an average of 8.3 per cent in the last 12 months – including a 16 per cent increase in the price of fruit and vegetables. If the government had a clue about how to fix this, it would.

Photo supplied. Image: The BFD.

My many visits to charities could be dispiriting. Instead, the commitment of organisers and volunteers is uplifting, and the situation reinforces my conviction that New Zealand can do so much better than this.

Restructuring Wellington bureaucracies should not be the government’s priority right now. Labour’s wasteful spending is fuelling inflation, not tackling it. Tax relief, which a National government will provide, will permanently increase people’s take-home pay. A bigger economy will pay for better services.

In other news two weeks ago, the government released its proposals to reduce greenhouse gas emissions created by farming. I summarise National’s response in this short video, but let me make a couple of things clear here.

National backs farmers and growers. National is also committed to New Zealand reaching its greenhouse gas reduction target of “net zero carbon” by 2050. To achieve that, agricultural emissions need to come down.

For about three years, there’s been a consensus building on how to tackle agricultural emissions. But when the government’s proposals were released last week, crucial elements of what had enabled consensus, were gone.

By the government’s own figures, 20 per cent of beef and sheep farm capacity will not survive its emissions proposals. That’s unacceptable to farmers, our rural communities and to National.

New Zealanders’ standard of living depends on the primary sector. To consider a substantial slice of it as collateral damage on the way to net zero is reckless, harsh and something National will vigorously oppose.

Technology is a better way to reduce emissions than bankruptcy. No one is going to solve climate change by moving farming from New Zealand to countries where farming is less carbon efficient.

National will oppose the government’s proposals which would decimate our sheep and beef sector while shipping emissions offshore. There’s a better way. A successful and enduring solution will be one that has the sector’s support. The government needs to listen to the sector’s feedback and reflect it in its next round of proposals.

Finally, thanks to everyone who’s so far sent in a pothole picture. There are some shockers! No wonder people are saying New Zealand’s roads have never been in a worse condition. National’s transport spokesman Simeon Brown picked a Pothole of the Week and published it here, on Sunday.

Simeon also got noticed by the UK’s Daily Mail with his frank views on climate change protesters blocking traffic this week. I respect people’s right to protest, but inconveniencing thousands of people is unlikely to win the protesters any support.

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